Hosting Companies

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Hosting Mumbo-jumbo Demystified

How much space do you need?

Hosting companies are selling packages with 2MB to 200 GB of space. So how much space do you need. If it is to be a hobby site with just a couple of pages, a 2 MB hosting may suffice. If it is a professional site with many pages, images and related stuff you may need more. It is important to make a fair assumption of the space you need and not to buy lots of extra space. Most companies will allow you to upgrade when you grow and need more space. Similarly make a fair estimate of the bandwidth you will need.

What is PHP and mySql?

Most host these days come with PHP and mySql support. PHP is the most popular scripting language and mySql the most popular database for that. If you need any thing more that static webpages, chances are that you will need PHP and mySql. CMS and blog softwares like wordpress need PHP and mySql.

What control panel do you get?

Most of the hosting companies give cPanel which is the best control panel allowing you to change settings for your hosting. DirectAdmin too is a pretty good control panel and is easier to manage than cPanel.

What is Fantastico?

Most cPanels will come with Fantastico. If you are planning to host a professional website fantastico is a real help. It allows you to set up blogs, forums and other software with few clicks and is a real time saver.

Parked domains and addon domain.

You may want to host multiple sites with a single web hosting account. You will need to have addon domains for this. It is necessary to check the number of addon domains allowed by your host as they are generally limited. Parked domains allow you to point multiple domain names to same site.

Before you commit to any webhosting company read the fine print. See what type of support they provide. What is their guaranteed uptime? Happy hosting

Grinhost.com provides totally free web hosting with PHP and unlimited mySql databases. You get 200 MB storage and 2 GB data transfer. Our forums provide free and quick support for any web hosting need. Author: Shabda Raaj

Website Templates - Build Your Own Website

Once only big companies could afford to have a presence on the worldwide web, but those days have changed. Today, nearly every business has a website, and usually the few that do not will want to have one. Web hosting and domain name rights have become very affordable so having a web presence is available to even the self employed for very little money.

The problem of course lies in setting up a website and making it look good and look professional. While a person can take the time to learn HTML and now XHTML to create and design their own pages, it is simpler and more accessible to more people to use website templates. Templates are much like a paint-by-number experience and take much of the work out of web page design.

With website templates it is easier and less expensive to create you own pages. Web designers can be costly and while you get a great design, your business probably can't afford it. Once your website is designed by a service you have to pay for site maintenance costs as well as keeping the site up-to-date. Website templates usually allow you to maintain your own site in a fairly simple manner.

There are many different avenues to obtaining website templates. Some are offered as freeware and shareware online and are free for the taking. You can also purchase reasonably priced software commercially that provides templates to allow you to create almost any kind of a website.

Many webhosting companies also provide easy to use website templates to create your own pages, many if not most of them at no additional cost other than the hosting fee. Many even offer 24/7 tech support to help you through design problems if you encounter any. None of these templates require any knowledge of HTML code either.

Naturally, every site is not a commercial one. A large number of them have been created by people for blogging purposes or for communication with relatives or to demonstrate a talent of some sort or for other activities. There are computer users who do not know HTML and haven't got the spare time to master it. For them, templates are the ideal approach. Once you locate the right templates, it's a snap for anyone to design a site.

Setting up a web site yourself and making it look good can be a difficult task. Alternately, hiring a professional to do the work can be extremely expensive. A great alternative to both of these options is to use website templates. These templates can make putting together a professional website much easier than trying to learn HTML. Software that includes templates can be purchased at a reasonable price, or you can use one or more of the free templates available online. In addition, many hosting companies include them in their hosting packages, providing a pretty much all-inclusive service.

Web Hosting - What Are You Really Looking For? Points to Consider Before Taking the Plunge

You have a burning desire to get your views 'out there', or you want to harness the power of the 'net to generate some income or grow your existing business, or any of the other myriad reasons that send people to their favourite search engine looking for somewhere to host their site.

A quick search throws up more web hosting offers than you can shake a stick at: some free; some sort of free; some paid. Some on single servers; some on clustered networks; some using VPS (virtual private server); some offering dedicated servers. There is a wide variety of combinations of features - disk space, bandwidth, databases, software and script support, site management, email provision etc etc.

How do you know what is best for you?

It is often what you are not told about a hosting plan that is more important than the headline details. We need to consider what we should be looking for and why.

Don't be seduced by massive amounts of disk space

In most cases disk space is not an issue. The very least you are likely find will be about 50Mb (but you'd have to look hard for that!) and even this is more than enough for, say, a blog site. Your text data takes up an extraordinarily small amount of space.

These are the factors that determine how much disk space you are likely to need:

- hosting a lot of images or videos

- using a script like a CMS (Content Management System), a gallery, forum or gaming script

- hosting an FTP site: a repository for files, often quite large, for your visitors to download

Just because a host is offering you gigabytes of storage doesn't make it a good deal. You probably won't need it but, if you are in the market for an FTP site then look for one that specialises in file storage. They usually offer vast amounts of disk space but not much else and you can use a regular hosting account that links to those files for download.

Beware the bandwidth trap

Bandwidth is the amount of traffic your site is allowed to have per month before your host either starts charging you some stupid amount money for going over your allowance or, worse, suspends your account until the following month.

Working out how much you need is remarkably tricky so the more you can get the better. A small personal site intended for a small audience like, for example, a photo gallery aimed at just your friends and relations, is not going to use a great deal of bandwidth - providing you size your images for the web and keep your videos to short clips. The FTP example mentioned above will gobble it up.

So consider these main questions when looking at the bandwidth offered:

- how many visitors am I likely to get?

- how much data would a typical visitor access?

- is my bandwidth usage likely to increase with time?

Wot? No databases?

Most scripts of any substance need a database to run on. Check the database provision of any host you are considering very carefully: no host is going to say they don't support them so it's the absence from the feature list that should alert you. Even then it may not be clear. I came across a web host just the other day that listed PHPmyAdmin among its features (PHPmA is a tool for managing MySQL databases) but did not mention databases. I queried the database provision with the host who told me they didn't support them! Not much use for PHPmyAdmin then.

One database is often enough because most scripts can share databases by means of prefixing table names to identify the ones they use uniquely. However, some scripts insist on having their own. It is also easier to manage, backup, restore and troubleshoot separate databases. Unless you are 100% certain that you are never going to need a database then steer clear of any plan that does not include at least one, no matter how good the rest of the plan looks!

But I want to be brilliantsite.com not brilliantsite.hostname.tld!

Most free hosts offer, as a baseline, a subdomain of their own domain on which your website will reside. These days though, most people want to host their own domain(s). Even if you are just starting out and are content to use brilliansite.hostname.tld there will come a time when you want to have your own unique identity. Make sure the hosting provider supports the addition of your own domain to your account - preferably more than one since once you have the domain-buying bug you'll probably never get rid of it!

I've signed up and now I find that my host doesn't support ASP (or whatever)!

This is why it's good to have an idea of what you want to do with your site before getting your hosting account. Let's say you want to run a forum. Research the forum software you want to use: find one you like, maybe by looking at other sites, and check out the forum's home website for details of its requirements before you make a decision. The one you want may not run on a Windows server, or it may need ASP and hate PHP scripting. If at all possible, choose a host that offers what you need for your planned site, don't chose a host and then make compromises to fit with their server configuration.

Help! My website's hit the No.1 spot in Google's ranking and I don't have enough of anything anymore!

You should be so lucky:) But if you are planning to promote, syndicate, advertise your website or increase traffic to it by any other means then you need to plan for the future. Make sure that your free or nearly free hosting plan is upgradeable. This could be to a formal paid plan or by selective add-ons to disk space, bandwidth, extra databases etc. There is nothing worse than having to migrate an established site to another host with the consequent downtime and inevitable conflict between the facilities offered by your old and new hosts. Not to mention the potential degradation of your Google ranking!

OK, so I have a hosting plan. Now what?

Well you shouldn't have one yet unless you can answer the following questions!

- What support does the host offer?

Often with free hosting plans there is no technical or other support at all. Those that do offer support usually do it solely through a ticketing system which may be integrated into their website or accessible from your site's control panel, if it has one. Most free hosting providers are not interested in investing in you once you have signed up. They have your account which is probably displaying their ads to generate income for them - and that is the extent of their interest. If possible, look for a provider which gives you both technical support through your control panel and personal support through their website.

- What price am I really paying for my free plan?

Displaying your host's ads, if they are relatively discreet, can be a small price to pay for free hosting but too high a price if you are left entirely to your own devices once your account is set up or if the ads detract from your site's feel and impact. It is not always easy to see how intrusive the ads will be before you sign up. Try to find out and, if you can't, look elsewhere: chances are the ads will be huge! Some free hosting plans rely on visitors to their own sites to generate income and simply use your site to encourage your visitors to go there by the addition of a small 'powered by' logo in the footer. For a small fee this can often be removed for you.

- How do I access my website's files?

There are generally two ways of getting your files onto the server and manging them once there: an FTP client on your own computer and a control interface using your browser which generally includes a file manager.

A control panel is essential for managing your account. It is the means by which you can add and manage databases, domains, various site specific settings and email accounts among other things. If you are not offered one, don't touch the plan! It will mean that you are at the mercy of your provider for making the smallest of changes to your setup.

What about email?

Most hosting providers offer some sort of POP account access as well as a web interface to your email accounts. Like disk space, the huge numbers here are probably not terribly important.

There are two main setups:

- POP email accounts created and maintained through your control panel

This is where you specify the actual email accounts to be used with your account, such as admin@mydomain.com and fred@mydomain.com. These accounts are accessible individually with a POP client like Outlook Express, Outlook or Eudora. A limit is usually put on the number of accounts you can have.

- Catch-all email accounts

This is generally what you get when the plan features lists say 'unlimited' email accounts. It means that messages sent to anything@mydomain.com all go to the same mailbox. The advantage is that you don't have to manage separate mailboxes for each address. The disadvantage is that is impractical if you have more than one user. The solution to this is to use GoogleApps. You set up a GoogleApps account; 'reroute' your email to Google; and setup separate accounts for your users which can then be accessed through the Gmail interface or by POP to your users' client software.

So the only thing to watch out for is the restricted number of email addresses available under setup 1. Sometimes only a single address is available with others being added for a charge.

So there you are....

That covers the fundamentals. There are many other considerations, mainly concerned with what functions the host server(s) have switched on or off but these can become a little technical and are certainly not going to be covered in any features list.

If you know there is something you absolutely must have, such as cron jobs, clean URLs or lock tables (see? I told you it was technical:) ) then ASK! If you can't ask or don't get an answer, then look somewhere else.

Happy Host Hunting!

Aphra has been writing academic articles, essays and papers for some time and now turns her hand to the Internet.

Why? Because that's what she does for a living! Philosophy is a nearly all-consuming interest but one has to eat:)

30+ years of working in the IT sector as well as in I.T. positions in non-I.T. companies, means plenty of expertise.

Time to share!

The Make Your Presence Felt family of domains AD-free Free Webhosting

PCExpertise UK: Design | Develop | Support | Train | Maintain | Manage

Managed Hosting Service Options

Managed hosting offers many options for the client company. The common thread running through them is taking the burden off the client company by making sure its computer system is always up and running, as well as eliminating the need for an IT team, which can be expensive.

The benefits found in outsourcing hosting includes zero downtime. This means that the client company's servers will never be offline. They will never be inaccessible to the client, which prevents a loss of productivity and thus possible profits. Managed hosting keeps the clients business in operation 100 % of the time. In the event that a hard drive should fail, what is known as "a hot spare" can be used to guarantee continuity and performance while repairs are underway. The client selects its initial storage requirements, but these are always able to be upgraded if necessary, and this upgrade is carried out online, eliminating any system reboots or data loss.

Two more advantages of managed hosting are: Increased performance (striping data across many different hard drives). Increased reliability. For increased reliability, there is data striping and mirrors across the disks, some of which are redundant. There are also hot spare disks that come into play if one of the primary disks fails.

Managed hosting is easily scalable. Traditional storage forces the client company to plan for capacity, but by outsourcing, it can buy what it needs and scale up when necessary. Volume can be upgraded without having to reboot the server, something that is impossible with a standard dedicated server.

Increased security is one more advantage of managed hosting. By physically limiting access to servers and SAN devices, and by isolating SANs from public networks, data can be protected, no matter where they are on network paths. This ensures that data is accessible only to those individuals authorised to access it.

A shared standby server protects data and the system in the event that the primary server should fail. If this occurs, the servers IPs are transferred to the standby server. The client company can also request dedicated standby servers.

Another way data is protected is through the application of redundant firewalls. Redundant firewalls offer 24-hour monitoring and management including the implementation, operations, ongoing configuration management, and any other changes and additions the client company might request. This prevents hackers from entering the system and stealing confidential data.

Finally, the server management includes licensing, the installation of the operating system, any Microsoft applications that might need to be installed, hardware upgrades, configuration of the operating system once installed, and server monitoring. Also, the client company can entrust the managed services provider with taking care of automated security patching or choose to do it on its own. In addition, the managed services provider offers technical support in the event that the client company has a problem with its computer system and remote access.

To summarise, there are many reasons why a company might outsource its hosting to a managed services provider: it eliminates the need for onsite staff, it is guaranteed, and the client company's resources are freed up to handle its own business.

Derek Rogers is a freelance writer who writes for a number of UK businesses. For Business Internet Services and Managed and Shared Hosting, he recommends Iconnyx.

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